BioWare Slips Mass Effect Fans A Little Hope For N7 Day

The Mass Effect franchise is currently in a state of suspended animation following the lackluster showing by the series’ fourth game, Mass Effect Andromeda. But there’s still a big Mass Effect following out there, and developer BioWare knows it–that’s why it acknowledges November 7 each year as “N7 Day” with some messaging to fans to remind them of their experiences trying to save the Milky Way Galaxy from the Reaper threat.

And it seems like BioWare boss Casey Hudson just used the studio’s N7 Day Twitter post to hint at the future of Mass Effect.

BioWare posted a short video on Twitter mostly made up of people from both the studio and the fan community talking about why they like Mass Effect. It also includes an announcement that the studio turned out a free update for Andromeda on Xbox One X that improves the game’s graphics.

What might be the most interesting part is the ending, though, where Hudson makes a statement laden with innuendo: “It means coming into the studio every day, dreaming about what the next great Mass Effect game will be.”

Then he stares right into the camera for a long moment as he sips from a Mass Effect mug with the famous Commander Shepard line, “I Should Go,” stenciled on the side. What does it mean???

Maybe nothing. After all, it’s not like BioWare or its owner, Electronic Arts, ever said Mass Effect was officially canceled–but single-player DLC for Mass Effect Andromeda never materialized, despite some clear setups for some in the story, after that game received a rough reception from both fans and critics. BioWare has been putting its efforts into Anthem, its open-world sci-fi multiplayer game, which is set to release in February.

It sure does seem like Hudson’s lingering look at the camera is a meaningful wink to fans, letting them know that the Mass Effect series hasn’t been killed off in a boardroom somewhere. And in a blog post in August, Hudson noted that BioWare knows fans want more Mass Effect (and more of its fantasy franchise, Dragon Age), and said the studio has people working on “secret projects,” even though he wouldn’t enumerate what they might be. So that meaningful look seems like a playful reminder to fans on N7 Day that BioWare hasn’t forgotten about them.

There’s one the big question of what Mass Effect might look like, post-Andromeda. Would BioWare maintain the course set by the fourth game, which spins off from the original trilogy and takes place in a whole new galaxy, or would that game’s rough reception lead to a whole new course?

If Hudson is telling fans to keep the faith for the future of Mass Effect, though, it’ll likely be a long time before we hear anything more about it, thanks in part to Anthem. In the meantime, fans might just have to watch BioWare communications for secret messages.